76 Iowa 565 | Iowa | 1889
— I. The plaintiff is a son of the defendant. He alleges that about the time he became of age he and his father entered into a parol contract to the effect that plaintiff should remain and labor upon the farm of defendant and should receive one-half of the land and one-half of the stock ; that, after laboring under this contract for many years, the parties had a settlement, in which it was agreed that, plaintiff should have eighty acres of the land, which should be conveyed to him, and the undivided one-third of sixty acres, and that the cattle should be sold, and the proceeds divided between the parties. In pursuance of this contract plaintiff went into the possession of the eighty acres of land, and built a house thereon, and has ever since been in the exclusive and adverse possession thereof. The cattle were sold, and three hundred dollars paid to plaintiff, but a large sum remains in the hands of defendant unaccounted for.
II. As the plaintiff does not appeal, he cannot complain of the decree, and ask that it be modified in this court. We need not, therefore, inquire whether he is entitled to any relief as to the undivided sixty acres of land, and the proceeds of the cattle received by defendant. We are only required to determine whether the decree in quieting plaintiff’s title to the eighty acres of land is supported by the evidence. We have reached the satisfactory conclusion that it is. While the evidence is conflicting, it shows very satisfactorily the contract between the parties for a division of the land, and a settlement, and that plaintiff went into possession of the eighty acres allotted to him, and built a house thereon,
Affirmed.